ARRS The Dark Side of Radiology Multispecialty After-Hours Imaging
Full Video Course
YOU WILL GET THE COURSE VIA LIFETIME DOWNLOAD LINK (FAST SPEED) AFTER PAYMENT
The paradigm shift from volume to value—intensely focused on quality of care, customer service, appropriateness, patient throughput and timeliness—has resulted in an ever-expanding provision of after-hours imaging services. Featuring 39 expert lectures ranging from topics on acute care to neuroradiology, this Online Course covers the spectrum of scenarios a radiologist working after dark may encounter and will enhance your diagnostic skills and patient care. In addition to online modules, you will also receive the accompanying book, consisting of 40 in-depth articles, shipped to you at no extra cost.
Earn credit at your own pace through May 14, 2021 and continue to access your videos until May 15, 2025. See learning outcomes and individual lectures below.
Learning Outcomes and Modules
Upon completion of this program, participants will posses the knowledge and skills to:
- make the correct diagnosis confidently in dealing with ill patients
- give a differential diagnosis, when necessary, and suggest the best management strategy
- apply practice-based strategies for optimizing patient outcomes
- describe systems barriers to improve diagnoses and patient outcomes
- analyze personal peer-reviewed data, define performance improvement strategies, and test those strategies in practice
Module 1 — Neuroradiology
- The Unconscious Patient—Carlos Torres
- The Worst Headache: How Imaging Helps—Sean Symons
- Imaging Stroke and TIA: What You Need to Look For—Achala Vagal, Mahati Reddy
- Head and Neck Infections: Don’t Forget the ABCs!—Christine Glastonbury
Module 2 — Musculoskeletal
- Imaging the Urgent Spine—Cynthia Chin
- MRI of Acute and Not-So-Cute—Daniel Wessel
- Shoulder and Hip Injuries for the After-Hours Imager—Jim Wu
- Imaging Workup of the Painful Joint—Laura Bancroft
Module 3 — Pediatrics
- Sports Injuries in Teenagers—Victor Ho-Fung
- Imaging the Sick Neonate—Janet Reid
- The Child With Breathing Difficulty: Top Ten Diagnoses—Edward Lee
- Imaging the Child With Abdominal Pain—Sudha Anupindi
Module 4 — QA Missed ED Cases
- Pediatrics Cases You Do Not Want to Miss—Lynn Fordham
- Musculoskeletal Interpretive Errors We Can Learn From—Eric England
- Problem-Solving With MRI for Challenging Neurological Cases Initially Imaged Using CT—Kathleen Fink
- Abdominal Errors in the Emergency Department: A Canadian Perspective—Ania Kielar
Module 5 — Acute Chest Pain
- Nuclear Variants and Pitfalls in the Patient With Chest Pain—Don Yoo
- Cardiothoracic Imaging Pearls and Pitfalls—Smita Patel
- The Triple Rule-Out: Protocols and Pitfalls—Diane Litmanovich
- Cross-Sectional Imaging in the Diagnosis of the Acute Aortic Syndrome—Costa Raptis
Module 6 — Abdomen
- Imaging Gastric Bypass Patients: What You Don’t Want to Miss—Christine Menias
- Imaging the Elderly Patient With Abdominal Pain—Bettina Siewert
- Imaging Hepatosplenic Emergencies—Stephan Anderson
- Transplant Evaluation: What Not to Miss—Shweta Bhatt
Module 7 — Women’s Imaging
- Acute Pelvic Pain—Sandra Allison
- Imaging a Woman With Abnormal Uterine Bleeding—Deborah Baumgarten
- Imaging for Postpartum Bleeding and Pain, Including After Termination or Abortion—Phyllis Glanc
Module 8 — QA Missed ED Cases
- “Oops and Uh-Ohs” of Fetal Imaging in the 2nd and 3rd Trimesters—Teresita Angtuaco
- Lessons From Abdominal MRI in the Emergency Department: Appendicitis During Pregnancy—Martin Smith
- Avoiding Misdiagnosis of Acute Gastrointestinal Tract Abnormality on CT—Perry Pickhardt
- Vascular Ultrasound: Pitfalls and Mimics—Nirvikar Dahiya
Module 9 — Vascular and/or Interventional Radiology
- Vascular and Interventional Radiology: What Went Wrong? The Interventional Radiology Patient Returns—Muneeb Ahmed
- The Ablation Patient Returns: Complications of Thermal Ablation—Meghan Lubner
- The Gastrointestinal Bleeder: Where Do We Start?—Kelvin Hong
- Pesky and Pertinent Interventional Radiology Questions After-Hours—Ian Brennan
Module 10 — Acute Care
- Imaging for Right Upper Quadrant Pain—Alison Harris
- Acute Scrotum—Therese Weber
- The Acutely Jaundiced Patient—Michael Blake
- Oncologic Emergencies: What the Radiologist Needs to Know—Kumaresan Sandrasegaran